Korean War Working Group
The Commissions Korean War Working Group is chaired by U.S. Representative
Sam Johnson of Texas and Colonel (retired) Aleksandr Semenovich Orlov of the
Institute of Military History in Moscow. The Korean War Working Groups
(KWWG) goals are to determine whether Soviets transferred American POWs from
Korea to the Soviet Union during the Korean War; and, if so, determine their
subsequent fates; and to clarify the circumstances of loss of American servicemen.
To meet these goals, the KWWG focuses on three major research areas.
Ministry of Defense Archives at Podolsk - Since the USRJC was formed,
one of the main goals of the U.S. side has been to gain access to the Russian
Ministry of Defense Archives at Podolsk. It was clear to U.S. analysts for
some time that Russian documents held at Podolsk could help us clarify a number
of MIA cases and possibly even locate and repatriate remains. Very few foreigners,
however, have ever had access to these archives.
After several years of negotiations, the Russian government agreed to allow
limited access to the declassified, operational records of the 64th Fighter
Aviation Corps. Currently, two American researchers are allowed into Podolsk
eight days each month to review these records for information pertaining to
unaccounted-for American servicemen. Copies of pertinent material are requested
directly from the archives, and are received once a month. The copies are
processed and transferred to the U.S. for further analysis.
KWWG researchers have enjoyed limited access to Podolsk since 1998, and have
discovered information clarifying the circumstances of loss and, in some cases
the fates, of over 140 unaccounted-for American flyers.
Interview program - The KWWGs extensive interview program has
resulted in over 600 interviews with Soviet Korean War veterans in Russia
and the former Soviet Union. The Soviet veterans have been cooperative and
forthright, and continue to be a profitable source of information. Many have
allowed us to copy journals, address books, and photos from their private
papers.
The interview program has generated previously unknown details on the fates
of several American servicemen, and has provided numerous pieces of information
regarding the possible transfer of American POWs to the Soviet Union.
Gulag Analysis Program - Since the end of WWII, many refugees, defectors,
and others have reported sighting American servicemen in the Soviet Gulag,
or internal network of camps and other detention facilities. One significant
report has surfaced recently in the memoirs of a former Soviet Gulag inmate,
who lists a number of names that correlate to unaccounted-for American service
personnel.
Relevant data from the memoirs; recent interviews with refugees, defectors,
and others; U.S. diplomatic and military archival material; and other first-hand
and indirect reporting sources have been consolidated to build an extensive
data base to further investigate the issue of American POWs held in the Gulag.
The sheer volume of this information indicates that there is a basis for further
research to the notion of POW transfers, regardless of the credibility that
either side of the Commission may choose to ascribe to any single source of
information. Compiled and then substantially expanded immediately after the
16th Plenum, the database (which has come to be known as the Gulag Study)
was provided to the Russian side in the spring of 2000 as the basis for developing
further a bilateral investigative inquiry under the auspices of the Joint
Commission.
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